Below is a historical comparison of how several influential theologians interpreted the key passages often debated in the infant-baptism question. The figures represent different traditions and centuries, yet they repeatedly return to the same small group of biblical texts.
1. Augustine of Hippo (354–430)
Augustine’s views became enormously influential in the
Western church.
Acts 2:38–39
- Augustine
emphasized the phrase “the promise is to you and to your children.”
- He
saw this as continuity of covenant inclusion, similar to how
children were included under Abraham.
Interpretation
- Children
of believers belong within the covenant community.
- Baptism
rightly applies to them as the covenant sign.
Colossians 2:11–12
- Augustine
connected circumcision and baptism strongly.
- Circumcision
was the Old Covenant sign, baptism the New Covenant counterpart.
Conclusion
- Since
infants received circumcision, infants should receive baptism.
Household Baptisms (Acts 16)
- Augustine
believed households naturally included children.
- He
regarded this as supporting the long-standing church practice.
1 Corinthians 7:14
- Augustine
interpreted “holy” children as belonging to the Christian
covenant community.
Overall emphasis
- Baptism
washes away original sin, making infant baptism especially
important.
2. Martin Luther (1483–1546)
Luther retained infant baptism but grounded it differently
than Augustine.
Acts 2:38–39
- Luther
emphasized that God’s promise extends to children.
- He
argued that faith itself is a gift God can create even in infants.
Colossians 2:11–12
- Luther
accepted the circumcision–baptism connection, though not as
systematically as later Reformed theology.
Household Baptisms
- Luther
viewed them as evidence that the early church baptized families
together.
1 Corinthians 7:14
- He
interpreted the verse as showing that children of believers belong to
God’s people.
Distinctive Lutheran emphasis
- Baptism
is a means of grace through which God creates and strengthens
faith.
3. John Calvin (1509–1564)
Calvin developed the most systematic covenantal argument
for infant baptism.
Acts 2:38–39
- Calvin
strongly emphasized “for you and your children.”
- He
believed Peter was explicitly reaffirming covenant continuity with
Abraham.
Colossians 2:11–12
- Calvin
argued that Paul intentionally parallels circumcision and baptism.
His conclusion:
- Circumcision
→ covenant sign in Israel
- Baptism
→ covenant sign in the church
Therefore:
- Children
should receive the covenant sign.
Household Baptisms
- Calvin
saw these as consistent with covenant family inclusion.
1 Corinthians 7:14
- Calvin
interpreted “holy” to mean set apart as members of the covenant
community.
Calvin’s central argument
- The
children of believers remain members of God’s covenant people, just
as in Israel.
4. Early Baptist Theologians (17th Century)
Early Baptists rejected infant baptism largely on New
Covenant theology grounds.
Representative figures include:
- John
Smyth
- Thomas
Helwys
- Benjamin
Keach
These leaders helped shape early Baptist confessions such as
the Second London Baptist Confession of Faith (1689).
Acts 2:38–39
Early Baptists emphasized the structure:
Repent → be baptized
They argued that the promise applies to:
- those
whom God calls
- those
who personally respond in faith
Therefore the verse does not mandate infant baptism.
Colossians 2:11–12
Early Baptists argued:
- The
passage speaks of spiritual circumcision, not physical
circumcision.
- Baptism
occurs “through faith.”
Conclusion:
- The
sign should be applied only to believers.
Household Baptisms
Baptists highlighted verses that say households heard the
gospel and believed.
Example:
- Acts
of the Apostles 16:34
Thus they concluded:
- Household
baptisms likely involved believing members, not infants.
1 Corinthians 7:14
Early Baptists argued that “holy” means:
- legitimate
or set apart relationally, not covenant membership.
Therefore:
- The
passage does not address baptism.
Historical Summary
|
Thinker |
Infant Baptism? |
Key Reason |
|
Augustine of Hippo |
Yes |
Removal of original sin and church tradition |
|
Martin Luther |
Yes |
Baptism as means of grace |
|
John Calvin |
Yes |
Covenant continuity OT → NT |
|
Early Baptists |
No |
New Covenant membership requires personal faith |
✅ A helpful observation:
The debate historically hinges less on the isolated verses
themselves and more on two deeper theological frameworks:
- Covenant
Continuity
(Augustine → Calvin → many Reformed traditions) - New
Covenant Believer Membership
(Anabaptists → Baptists → many evangelical traditions)
These frameworks shape how the same passages are read.